How do you get yourself into right mindset?

I gained the COVID 19 and have not been able to have the self control to get back in a healthy tracking/ intentional mindset. What do you do to kickstart this and how do you create a habit? Any inspiration much appreciated!
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Replies

  • mirianyusm
    mirianyusm Posts: 89 Member
    I'm a professional dog trainer and a dog sports competitor -- stick with me, I have a point.

    One of the big principals in dog training is basically about laying a strong foundation, and only increasing the difficulty when you have success 80+ percent of the time. Another one is that you make getting it right as obvious and easy as you possibly can - you set up in a way that makes it almost impossible for the dog to get it wrong.

    In weight loss, I am the dog.

    There is no mindset for me, really. I started with a very simple, easy, foundation behavior that I built upon. For me that was tracking my food before I ate it. No restriction, nothing else. Just inputting what I ate into MFP. Everything else there - getting enough protein, getting used to a ceiling on my calories (at maintenance first), creating a deficit - built upon the previous steps and habits, a lot of which are individual to me and my psychology.

    the basics are still just 'lay a foundation of easy behaviors, increase difficulty slowly, add new things only when successful at the previous'.

    everyone wants to results now - in weight loss and dogs, actually - but that 'slow is fast' saying is accurate. You can go slow and lay a really good foundation - or you can rush ahead to try to get the results you want right now, and spend the next several years or decades fixing problems that result from the holes in your foundation.

    breathe. Relax. Look and think about what things you'd like to see your life look like and then take the smallest, easiest step toward that. Get that ingrained. Then add another one. Troubleshoot when you find things getting hard about how you can make success easier.

    LAY A FOUNDATION before you start building.

    This. I would just log my food without the intention of eating at a deficit. You will start seeing what you are eating and you will probably start making changes naturally. Good luck to you.
  • MsCzar
    MsCzar Posts: 1,072 Member
    This might sound odd, but I owe a lot of my stick-to-it-iveness to VEVO and YouTube fashionistas. Even though I am nowhere NEAR that universe, watching the perfect bodies in music videos and keeping track of the latest fashion trends keeps my head in the game.
  • ekaplanloring
    ekaplanloring Posts: 2 Member
    Logging my food is key. And walking. Those are two things that help put me in the right mindset. I’ve been maintaining for about a year now. I’m at the higher end of where I want to be so I want to drop a few myself.
    Night time snacking is my downfall so I’m trying to eat dinner a little later and just have a warm beverage in the evening. I walk/run everyday (10,000 steps) and take a few classes a week. I try to keep moving to keep my metabolism up and to help burn additional calories I might be eating. It’s not always easy but every day is an opportunity to do better. You can do this!
  • makethistimedifferent
    makethistimedifferent Posts: 31 Member
    edited January 2022
    I got my master's degree and focused my studies on weight loss maintenance with the intent of learning how to maintain my own weight loss. Along the way, I learned a lot about mindset, including some interesting information on willpower from a book titled Willpower.
    I put everything I learned in a complimentary workshop, but it's a lengthy one. I can share the details of the workshops, which I'm breaking down into bite-sized mini-workshops if you'd like. The next one will be this Saturday and be about 20-30 minutes.
    In short, it's different for everyone, but there are questions you can ask yourself to help you get to your goals.
  • elisa123gal
    elisa123gal Posts: 4,333 Member
    Take a front and side picture of yourself in your underwear. That motivated me. Oh.. and look at it every day. Kept me on track.
  • AnnPT77
    AnnPT77 Posts: 34,616 Member
    edited February 2022
    Take a front and side picture of yourself in your underwear. That motivated me. Oh.. and look at it every day. Kept me on track.

    Minimalist bathing suit or equivalent if you might want to share it on MFP someday as a before and after . . . a bet I routinely suggest people plan to make, just to keep future options open. (There's a "no undies" rule.)

    ETA: I have one in short shorts and a pretty minimalist midriff-baring tie top, not this li'l ol' lady's usual fashion look. 😆
  • wunderkindking
    wunderkindking Posts: 1,615 Member
    Yeah, my whole 'maintenance' motivation is 'if my pants don't fit, it's a problem'. I LIKE the clothes I have now and do not in any way want to buy yet another full wardrobe as I did 3 times over loss. Much easier just to watch it and adjust.
  • positiveyou146
    positiveyou146 Posts: 7 Member
    to get motivated, first you need to find what motivates you, everyone is different. Have many small goals, like stepping stones to help achieve bigger goals, When shopping HAVE a list and stick to that list, when at home, move any high sugar/fats foods, or donate them, and have a visual piece of clothing want to get back into, when the feeling of hunger approaches, drink water, because what we think is hunger is usually not, plan weekly meals that are tasty, filling and balanced, and find a hobby or activity that is fun to do, and creates a sense of achievement as well as physically moving - Motivation is simple if you find your "why", most important, followed by the "how", everything else is about focus and support.
  • Strudders67
    Strudders67 Posts: 989 Member
    My motivation was being diagnosed as diabetic. Not as bad as having a heart attack, but also not recommended. I wish I'd known I was even close - getting a full blown diagnosis was a huge shock and a wake up call that I needed to lose weight and take a closer look at what I was snacking on every day. I was going to the gym a lot and wasn't putting weight on, but I also wasn't losing anything.

    I got my blood sugar numbers under control, purely via diet, and my motivation is to keep things that way. Tablets and injections don't appeal. I also had to buy a complete new wardrobe (and gave my old clothes to charity) so the financial aspect of buying more clothes is another motivation.
  • jasontriwahyudi
    jasontriwahyudi Posts: 10 Member
    Association for sure - be with the right people who can support and cheer you on!
  • fatty2begone
    fatty2begone Posts: 249 Member
    My motivation is:
    1 not huffing up one flight of stairs.
    2 not looking like my beloved mother who was over weight since I can remember and not being told I have big bones like the other fat family members.
    3 wanting to look good for myself and my hubby.
    4 I plan to live a long happy retirement and being healthy is part of the aspect!
    5 having a normal BMI
    6 Wanting to go shopping for clothes
  • ahoy_m8
    ahoy_m8 Posts: 3,053 Member
    So much rests on the mindset, doesn't it? That makes it such a good Q, OP. Mindset can be a challenge. Some people have long term struggles with their bodies (disease or injury or what have you), but for me the struggle is mostly mindset.

    As a 30+ year maintainer, I say my weight is a constant battle -- a battle I am winning! -- but a battle nonetheless. And the battle is more with my mind than anything else. Yesterday I wanted to quit after my first ST set, played with excuses like my needing a rest because of a weird scapula pain that showed up Saturday, but just taking it one lift at a time I finished 3 sets and felt pretty good about it. Scapula felt the same.

    I think a couple things help with mindset.
    - Realize that mental energy is a limited resource and prioritize accordingly.
    (I.e. don't try too many difficult things at once.)
    - Make some things as easy mentally as possible.
    (E.g. IMHO it helps to have a lifting routine that is challenging enough to hold my interest on good days but easy enough that I know I can get through it on days that aren't my best.)
    - Don't blow all my mental energy on something unrealistic or too hard.
    - Do things that build/reinforce discipline and healthy habits. That carries me when my head isn't totally in the game, like yesterday's ST. It was habit/discipline that kelp me going. I just tried to think about the one next lift and nothing else.
    - Take a break (training rest week or diet maintenance week or just a break from tracking) when other things in life are a higher priority. Or for no reason. When I'm struggling with my mindset, sometimes a week off lets me come back to the routine with fresh energy.

    The bottom line is maintenance takes some mental effort, but the effort it totally worth it.